Archive for March, 2010

Truckin’ Quilters?!


Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

This is a great article on the Wall Street Journal: 

Quilting Trucker
Enjoy!

Quick Star Design class – Asilomar


Friday, March 26th, 2010

We had a wonderful week together at Asilomar in Pacific Grove, CA. The Empty Spools Seminars hosts several sessions each year, and 8-10 quilt workshops each session. Please enjoy the quilts made during our workshop!

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Autograph Party!


Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

ARTIST APPEARANCE and AUTOGRAPH PARTY!

Date:    Sunday, March 28, 2010 

Where:  Quilter’s Paradise, 1451 Montiel Road, Suite 140, Escondido, CA 92026 

Time:    1-4 pm 

Click for directions 

Come visit with quilt designers whose work is featured in my new book Quick Diamond Quilts & Beyond! 

Quilt artists featured:

  • Betty Alofs 
  • Anna Mae Bach 
  • Kathy Butler 
  • BJ Coopes 
  • Frances Cunningham 
  • Jan Darnell  
  • Carol Gilbert  
  • Jacqueline Lacey
  • Lee Olson
  • Nancy Rowland 
  • Jane Sassaman 
  • Cindy Stearns 
  • Suzanne Taylor 
  • Patricia Votruba
  • Amy Wazny
  • Pat Wolfe
  • Julia Zgliniec 

Machine Quilters:

  • Faye Collingsworth
  • Sue Mezera 
  • Jill Miller  
  • D’Andrea Mitchell 
  • Carolyn Reynolds
  • Lois Russell 
  • Janet Sturdevant Stuart
  • Marita Wallace 

I look forward to seeing  you on Sunday for our Autograph Party!

Farewell, Jacqueline


Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Jacqueline Lacey in her studio

We lost a dear friend this week. I met Jacqueline at Paradise Sewing Pfaff store in Poway, CA. She was the funniest person I had met in a long time! Jacqueline was creative in a free and exuberant way, sharing herself and her art with those who showed an interest. Jacqueline created and submitted projects for two of my books, Quick Star Quilts and Quick Diamond Quilts.

Jacqueline, Nancy O, Jan and Anna Mae

From Naomi: “Jacqueline had been in ill health the past couple of months. On Thursday she was admitted to the ICU with pneumonia. Unfortunately, her weakened body couldn’t fight the infection, and she passed away on Friday, March 5, surrounded by her calligraphic and artistic  family.

You are invited to share memories and celebrate Jacqueline’s life with her sons, Steven and Gregory Lacey, and their families this coming Saturday, March 13th, from 3-8 p.m. at 858 Summersong Court,  Encinitas CA 92024. Condolences may also be sent there. If you wish, please send or bring a tribute to Jacqueline for her sons to have as a remembrance. It should be on 8 ½ x 11 paper. You can write or draw or glue (fabric?).”

  

 

 

Bloomington, Indiana


Friday, March 5th, 2010

Welcome to Bloomington, Indiana! If you are within driving distance, you must add this annual show to your calendar! The town of Bloomington is charming – built around a court house square, the shops and restaurants lure you into their cozy establishments. Bloomington is home to Indiana University, and is culturally diverse.

Click to play this Smilebox slideshow: 2010 Bloomington, IN
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Highlights on this trip are dining each evening with fellow teacher friends. The first night four of us went to a great restaurant/pub called the Irish Lion.  PHOTOS  It is an old building, beautifully preserved, as if you walked into a honest-to-goodness Irish tavern. We dined on corned beef and cabbage, beef pie and other specialties.

Workshops the first day – Thursday – went well. Mine was a Quick & Easy Broken Star without Y seams. It was a 1-day class, and the students progressed well. Our classroom wall space was not good for mounting design walls, so I regret I didn’t take photos during class! Classmate John finished his quilt top (roughly 70″ square) and plans to piece the small broken stars (12 of them) to create a border and increase it to bed-size.

Last night we dined at Farm Bloomington restaurant facing Courthouse Square. Chef Daniel Orr’s culinary skills are world-reknown. The restaurant is very eclectic inside, with artistic divisions between dining areas such as quilts, farm implements, and salvaged everyday antiques. The General Manager gave us a tour of the two-story restaurant, including the cellar. It is a wild collection of ephemera from bygone days, wall murals, small private rooms with Christmas lights strung merrily.

Six of us sat in a private high-walled circular booth right near the kitchen, just near the wall adorned with an antique bedpan collection!  We ordered a variety of dishes, and our enthusiasm encouraged the chef, who plied us with additional tasty treats. “Here, try this – complements of the chef!”  I ordered the Bitter Orange Glazed Hoosier Duckling with Sautéed Pumpkin and Honey Glazed Chestnuts. WOW was it tasty!  Other highlights: we tried a Minty Green Pea Guacamole (unusual, creamy, chilled, slightly sweet) and the intriguing Three Floyds Gumballhead (which turned out to be a beer!).

The highlight of the evening, aside from our converstaion and “tales from the road”, was seeing musician/songwriter John Mellancamp and his lady companion, who passed through the restaurant and ate in a quiet area within sight of our table.

I hope to see the quilts at the show today, and will post a message  if I can take a few photos! My workshop begins in less than an hour, so I must run! Today I am teaching the strip-pieced Variable Hunter Star – although this design looks very traditional, the fabric choices determine the finished project.